I recently picked up this "eMachines" from my friend Bill to bring to the next local meetup and plop on the "free" table. I thought I'd spruce it up a little bit in the meantime, since, well, I enjoy doing just that 😂. Let's talk about it in a 🧵 here!
So, first and foremost, this isn't actually an eMachines. The original mobo died and it was replaced with a Biostar M6TWL and a Pentium III 600 MHz CPU. Does that makes this thing a "reverse sleeper"? 🤣
Given this, we have a little bit of work to do. First, unrelated, but the CMOS battery is dead. Also, there is a SATA Western Digital 120GB HDD installed, but that won't work without some sort of adapter, since the motherboard only supports IDE.
As such, I went to the hard drive box, and picked out this 6.4GB Quantum. Also, the Molex cables on this power supply won't reach the hard drive as is, so we will use this splitter as an extension cable!
Although this case doesn't really support it, I am going to temporarily install a floppy disk drive for ease of setup as well. So, here it is!
Here are some of the BIOS setup pages. Pretty cool that you can turn on and off the AC'97 features in BIOS. And just look at that little CPU fan spin 😂
Now here is a curiosity. This system was missing its I/O shield. I think I have perhaps TWO SPARE I/O shields total in my entire collection, that I got from various cases over the years. And it just so happens that I have the right one for this motherboard. Win!
Since we have a bunch of memory, I thought I would upgrade this system. However, it doesn't seem to be recognizing the 256MB DIMMs I installed. I popped one out, and it shows 128MB as we see here, and with two installed, it shows 256MB total. Here we go again...
Rather than fiddle with that any more, I just installed two matching 128MB chips. That's enough for what we are going to do anyway.
With that out of the way, I figured we can install a network card. I have this nice new old stock 3Com PCI card laying around. And the reason I chose this one? This motherboard has Wake on LAN! I got the card installed and the Wake on LAN connector all connected up!
After all of this fun, I did run a full round of MemTest86+, and it passed. So I got out my Win98 boot disc and Win98SE install disc. I set the system to boot from CD ROM, and copied the installer files to the hard drive.
From there, I kicked off install! I got a little bored during the install, and noticed that this front panel pops off. I have no idea why, but hey, it is a thing 🤣🤣
Next up, I needed drivers for the network card. Since I had that big spool of CDs that I picked up from Savers a few weeks ago, I just assumed use one to burn network card drivers. And from there, installation was a breeze!
After that, I decided to install the Intel chipset drivers. As always, thanks to Phil's Computer Lab for making files like this so readily available!
Next up, I used Unknown Devices to point out what I had suspected as far as missing drivers were concerned: 810e graphics and AC'97 audio. I started with graphics, and, wow, what an improvement!
AC'97 audio drivers installed without a hitch too, and now we have sound!
When it was all said and done, we have ZERO yellow exclamation marks in Device Manager. This really turned out to be a nice little PC!
Anyway, hope you enjoyed the thread, thanks for following along, see you soon!
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In my haste yesterday, there are TWO THINGS that I forgot to do and post about for this "eMachines" system. One is more important than the other! Let's talk about it in a brief 🧵 here!
First of all, before we get too far, recall that this isn't actually an eMachines. The original motherboard failed, and a Pentium III Biostar motherboard was put in to replace it, in what I am calling a "reverse sleeper"
So, what did I forget? Well, the first thing was to showcase the Wake on LAN capability! I installed a 3Com network card with Wake on LAN support. If we know the Ethernet MAC address and have a program to send a "magic packet", and the BIOS settings are right, we can use it!
I recently received this Dell Inspiron 700m from my friend Bill. Originally a Windows XP system. I thought "maybe I could make this a mean DOS/Windows For Workgroups 3.11 system." Let's give it a shot in a 🧵 here, I bet we can get pretty close!
First thing I did was to look in the BIOS. This system is a Pentium M 2.0 GHz with 512MB of memory. The optical is a CD-RW/DVD. Okay, this should be more than adequate for what we want to do here 😂. Oh... and look, we can boot from a USB floppy drive! Okay, let's do that.
First thing I thought I would do is to boot DOS 6.22. And... look at that, I even had the right drivers set up to detect the optical drive. Win!
I got a few items in the mail for my Compaq LTE 5000 laptops! A power adapter... and a bunch of Cisco Aironet 350 wireless network cards from a friend who bought like 50+ of them 😂. Let's test out the network cards and go through how to set them up in MS-DOS!! Time for a 🧵
Before I get into the setup procedure, I wanted to inform that I do have a setup procedure for this on one of my old "crap film quality" videos (not that the newer ones were better 😂). If you want a video walkthrough, hosted by a younger RTC, go here!
To make these cards work in MS-DOS, we need an older firmware. It has become a bit scarce online, so I put it in my GitHub repo: github.com/cml37/dos-util…
Memory testing, final round! Mostly good news, but some bad news too. What happened? And... just how many memory spares did we end up having? Let's find out, 🧵 time!
First, let's talk about the cliffhangers from last time. Both the CompUSA custom and the eMachines T2341 finished their round of testing, and are good to go!
Now for some bad news. I ended up using the Pacman PC for a lot of PC100/PC133 testing, and when I put everything back together, the 512MB DIMM started to fail. Boo! So we are back to 768MB, but we got to use DIMMs that I bought a while back that were in my basement PII PC.
So, first of all, the Pacman PC passed its tests with flying colors! Woot! I'll leave it at 1GB for future fun.
As such, I've moved on to the CompUSA PC. It has an Intel SE440BX-2 motherboard. Oh, here we go again, that i440BX chipset. Also, looks like the manual and The Retro Web disagree here on max memory, but I bet with the right kind of 256MB chips, we could hit 768MB.
Memory test round 2: fight! Let's talk about what we are up to today, in a 🧵here!
First, some good news. After running for 9 hour or so, the Abit PC in the basement passed multiple times! I didn't snap a picture, so this one from yesterday will have to do 😂
Now for some bad news: the eMachines failed on a SINGLE BIT on a SINGLE PASS of its 2GB memory. I want to keep this one at 2GB, so I am re-running MemTest86+ on it again. If it passes a round or two, I will leave it.